某综合性医院外科合理使用抗生素的管理效果:一项为期7年的药物流行病学研究结果

Q3 Medicine
A A Korableva, E V Yudina, L E Ziganshina
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:包括过度使用和滥用抗生素在内的不合理用药仍然是卫生保健系统面临的一个关键问题。在这方面,研究改善药物临床使用的方法非常重要。目的:评价某综合性医院外科抗菌药物合理使用管理的有效率。材料和方法:干预综合了研究、教育和方法活动:制定了各个外科部门围手术期抗生素预防(PABP)的地方协议;与专科外科医师讨论当地PABP方案;发布了关于执行PABP的正式命令;更改术前第一次抗生素剂量注册用药处方清单;审计和反馈过程被引入,以及临床药理学家的咨询被实施。我们采用ATC/DDD方法,根据医院外科抗生素使用量的变化(定量和定性)评估干预措施的有效率。比较干预实施前后及科室间(血管外科和腹部外科)的研究结果。抗菌药物(ATCJ01)的消耗量以每100个住院日的确定日剂量(DDD/100个住院日,世界卫生组织推荐的指标)和每100名治疗患者的DDD (DDD/100名治疗患者)来测量。结果:2006 - 2012年外科抗菌药物用量下降188 DDD/100例。当使用DDD/100住院日指标时,我们得到了相反的结果(增加2.5 DDD/100住院日),这可以解释为对医院整体工作指标的依赖及其在研究期间的变化。观察到的抗菌药物用量变化在不同的外科科室有所不同。最明显的积极变化发生在血管外科:抗菌药物总用量减少298 DDD/100名治疗患者,第三代头孢菌素的使用从141 DDD/100名治疗患者减少到38 DDD/100名。这些积极的变化伴随着储备抗生素的消费/使用水平相同(低)。在腹部外科,抗生素的总使用量没有减少,三代广谱头孢菌素和氟喹诺酮类药物的使用量也没有减少,我们观察到在研究期间,储备抗生素(碳青霉烯类)的使用有所增加。抗生素用量的积极变化与部门经理/主管对干预措施的积极态度有关:我们观察到,在公布围手术期抗菌预防行政命令后,抗生素用量的下降最为明显。结论:科学、教育和方法相结合的干预措施对提高抗生素的应用是有效的。该研究结果为使用DDD/100名接受治疗患者的测量方法分析药物消耗提供了依据,此外还使用了世卫组织推荐的DDD/100个床位日指标,该指标取决于医院的总体表现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[Efficacy of Management for Rational Use of Antibiotics in Surgical Departments at a Multi-Disciplinary Hospital: Results of a 7-year Pharmacoepidemiological Research].

Background: Irrational medicine use including excessive use and abuse of antibiotics remains a crucial problem for the healthcare systems. In this regard, studies examining approaches to improving the clinical use of medicines are highly important.

Aim: to assess the efficacy rate of management for the rational use of antibiotics in surgical departments of a multi-disciplinary hospital.

Material and methods: The intervention complex combined the research, educational, and methodological activities: local protocols for perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis (PABP) for various surgical departments were developed; local PABP protocols were discussed with the physicians of specialized surgical departments; official order on implementation of PABP was issued; the list of drug prescriptions for registration of the first pre-operative antibiotic dose was changed; audit and feedback processes were introduced as well as consultations of a clinical pharmacologist were implemented. We assessed the efficacy rate of the interventions basing on the changes in consumption of antibiotics (both quantitatively and qualitatively) at surgical departments of a hospital using ATC/DDD methodology. Comparison of the studied outcomes was performed before and after the intervention implementation and between the departments (vascular and abdominal surgery). The consumption of antibacterial agents (ATCJ01) was measured as a number of defined daily doses (DDD) per 100 bed-days (DDD/100 bed-days, indicator recommended by the World Health Organization, WHO) and DDD per 100 treated patients (DDD/100 treated patients).

Results: From 2006 to 2012, a decrease in antibacterial consumption in surgical departments by 188 DDD/100 treated patients was observed. We obtained the opposite results when using an indicator of DDD/100 bed-days (increase by 2.5 DDD/100 bed-days) which could be explained by the dependence on indices of overall hospital work and its changes during the examined period. Observed changes in antibacterial consumption varied in different surgical departments. The most pronounced positive changes were noted in the department of vascular surgery: decrease in total antibacterial consumption by 298 DDD/100 treated patients, decrease in the use of cephalosporins of the III generation from 141 to 38 DDD/100 treated patients. These positive changes were accompanied by the same (low) level of consumption/use of reserve antibiotics. In the department of abdominal surgery, there was no decrease in total antibiotic consumption, as well as in consumption of broad-spectrum cephalosporins of the III generation and fluoroquinolones, and we observed an increase in the use of reserve antibiotics (carbapenems) during the study period. Positive changes in antibiotic consumption were associated with the positive attitude of the manager/head of the department towards interventions: we observed the most pronounced decrease in antibiotic consumption straight after the publication of the administrative order on perioperative antibacterial prophylaxis.

Conclusion: The combination of scientific, educational, and methodological interventions is effective for improving antibiotic application. The study results provide the rationale for analyzing the drug consumption using the DDD/100 treated patients measure in addition to the WHO-recommended indicator of DDD/100 bed-days which depends on overall hospital performance.

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